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Journal Article

Citation

Conde M, Hendry G, Skelton DA. J. Frailty Sarcopenia Falls 2019; 4(3): 78-90.

Affiliation

School of Health & Life Sciences, Institute of Applied Health Research, Glasgow Caledonian University, Glasgow, UK.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, Hylonome Publications)

DOI

10.22540/JFSF-04-078

PMID

32300722

PMCID

PMC7155362

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Despite growing evidence that foot and ankle exercise programmes are effective for falls prevention, little is known about older adults' views and preferences of programme components for long-term maintenance. The aims of this study were to explore the experiences and acceptability of Scottish and Portuguese older adults of undertaking a home-based foot, ankle and lower limb exercise intervention.

METHODS: Ten Scottish (mean age 76 years, 7 female) and fourteen Portuguese (mean age 66 years, 12 female) community-dwelling older adults undertook the programme for one week, followed by focus group discussions (2-6 people per group), guided by a semi-structured interview guide. Data was analysed using thematic analysis.

RESULTS: Seven themes were identified:Assessment, Group exercise taster, Home based exercise; Footfall programme kit, Midweek phone call, Reasons for participation and the Research Process. Programme components, support telephone calls and research procedures were generally well accepted by participants and they valued having a contribution to the design. They preferred a blended home and intermittent group-based programme format for motivation and progression and recommended changes to some of the exercises and equipment to reduce barriers to participation. Some cultural differences emerged, including importance of the functional assessments for Portuguese participants, time issues and difficulty in completion of the exercise diary, reflecting lower literacy levels.

CONCLUSIONS: Participants found the programme acceptable but preferred a blended home and occasional group-based programme for adherence and motivation. A strong educational component to improve health literacy and simple paperwork completion to avoid data loss in future studies with Portuguese older adults is important.

Copyright: © 2019 Hylonome Publications.


Language: en

Keywords

Exercise; Falls; Feasibility; Feet; Older adults

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